Emirates joins Etihad Airways in flight to Tripoli from the UAE, after the Abu Dhabi airline began operations to Libya in January.Emirates grounded its flights to Tripoli in February last year as the uprising to topple Libya's leader Qaddafi gathered pace.In resuming our flights to Tripoli, Emirates is underlining its commitment to Libya at a time when the country is demonstrating its strength and resilience in the face of adversity," said Mr Grillet.The political transition in Libya from civil war to newly elected assembly has been relatively smooth compared with other countries that were part of the Arab Spring.Oil output from Libya fell last month but the future looks bright for the sector as the country holds the largest proven oil reserves in Africa, at about 47 billion barrels, ahead of Nigeria with 37 billion. Egypt has only 4.4 billion.
Moreover, OMV, an Austrian oil and gas firm owned in part by Abu Dhabi, last week said it was pumping at 90 per cent of pre-civil war levels in Libya and would return to full production by the end of the year.Emirates began flying to Tripoli in March 2001. Four weekly flights will now resume to the Libyan capital from October 29, departing from Dubai at 9.25am every Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday.Flights to and from Tripoli will be served by an Airbus A330-200 with 12 first-class, 42 business-class and 183 economy seats, along with 15 tonnes of cargo-carrying capacity.Emirates currently flies to more than 120 destinations in 74 countries and in the next six months will launch five further routes: to Washington DC; Adelaide; Lyon; Phuket; and Warsaw.